* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Lecture18 - UCSB Physics
Sample-return mission wikipedia , lookup
Exploration of Io wikipedia , lookup
History of Solar System formation and evolution hypotheses wikipedia , lookup
Heliosphere wikipedia , lookup
Kuiper belt wikipedia , lookup
Definition of planet wikipedia , lookup
Tunguska event wikipedia , lookup
Scattered disc wikipedia , lookup
Planets in astrology wikipedia , lookup
Exploration of Jupiter wikipedia , lookup
Juno (spacecraft) wikipedia , lookup
Jumping-Jupiter scenario wikipedia , lookup
Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 wikipedia , lookup
Astronomy 1 – Winter 2011 Lecture 18; February 16 2011 Previously on Astro-1 • Beyond the giant planets – Uranus – Neptune – Pluto and the other TNOs Homework – Due 02/23/10 • On your own: answer all the review questions in chapter 15 • To TAs: answer questions 15.34 15.44 Friday: midterm-2 • • • • • Open book – open notes No cell-phones internet Twenty multiple choice questions One problem like homework Bring scantron form and calculator Today on Astro-1 • Asteroids • Comets • Meteors Hubble Space Telescope Image of Ceres 216 Kleopatra 253 Matilde Question 18.1 (iclickers!) • Only the few largest asteroids are found to be spherical. Why is this? • A) Repeated collisions with other asteroids have worn them to spheres • B) Self gravity for the most massive asteroids was sufficient to pull them to this shape during their early history • C) Their visible outer atmospheres assume a spherical shape even though their surfaces are irregular • D) They solidified from spherical gas clouds in their early history and retained this shape Barringer Crater; why are there so few craters? Evidence of impact that killed dinosaurs? ~10 km in diameter, only! Tunguska: 80m asteroid = 100s of kilotons of TNT Deep impact. What are the odds of 1 km asteroid? 1/300000 years; monitoring under way, e.g. Panstarrs Question 18.2 (iclickers!) • If an asteroid is found to be orbiting a circular path around the Sun at the same distance as Jupiter (5.2 AU) what will be its orbital period compared to that of Jupiter, which is 11.86 years? • A) The same as Jupiter • B) Exactly ½, because it will be in a synchronous orbit with Jupiter • C) About 10 times as long, because the Sun’s gravitational force is much smaller on such a small object • D) About 1/10 of Jupiter’s period, because it is a much smaller object 300 tons per day; not covered by car insurance… Meteors help reveal the origin of the solar system Did a supernova explode 4.56 billion years ago triggering The formation of the solar system? Comet Hale-Bopp Comet Hyakutake Viewed close-up by Giotto ~50000 AU equivalent to 1.3 million miles if distance to mercury is scaled to distance to SB Comets break up due to tidal forces! Question 18.3 (iclickers!) • The major difference between the orbits of most asteroids and those of comets is that • A) Comet orbits are mostly circular and in the ecliptic plane, whereas asteroids have elliptical orbits inclined at random to the ecliptic plane • B) Comets never approach closer to the Sun than approximately Jupiter’s orbit, whereas some asteroids approach very close to the Sun • C) Asteroids orbit the Sun continuously, whereas all comets approach the Sun’s vicinity only once before leaving the Solar System • D) Come orbits are highly elliptical and at random inclinations to the ecliptic plane, whereas asteroids have circular orbits in the ecliptic plane For the romantically inclined… shooting stars Summary • In between Mars and Jupiter there is an asteroid belt, possibly due to the gravitational effects of Jupiter • The inner solar system is populated by asteroid, sometimes almost as big as the Moon (actually, the Moon could have been an asteroid at some point!) • Some asteroids impact Earth on a regular basis (NEO) – Possibly responsible for extinction of dinosaurs – Provide information on the early-solar systems • Comets are dirty snowballs on highly elliptical orbits • When they travel close to the Sun, their ice is vaporized forming spectacular tails. – Direction of tails is due to solar wind and solar radiation pressure. – Originate from the Kuiper Belt The End See you on Friday: MIDTERM!